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The continental trade pact is up for review in 2026 -- here's what Trump might want

The continental trade pact is up for review in 2026 -- here's what Trump might want

A mandatory review of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico-Agreement on trade kicks into high gear next year as U.S. President Donald Trump continues his campaign to realign global trade and poach key industries from America's closest neighbours. Negotiations on the trade pact, better known as CUSMA, were a stress test for Ottawa during the first Trump administration. The trade talks were tense at...

Pulled '60 Minutes' segment surfaces on web with Canadian broadcaster's branding

Pulled '60 Minutes' segment surfaces on web with Canadian broadcaster's branding

A segment of the American news program "60 Minutes," pulled by CBS News prior to its U.S. airing, began circulating online Monday with the branding of Canadian broadcaster Global TV. Multiple media reports say the program was uploaded to StackTV, Global's streaming platform, though it was not available to watch as of late Monday. Global TV and its parent company...

Interim budget officer says he regrets calling feds' fiscal management 'stupefying'

Interim budget officer says he regrets calling feds' fiscal management 'stupefying'

Jason Jacques says he learned a lot about the importance of choosing his words carefully in his first few months as the interim parliamentary budget officer. His whirlwind ascent from obscure bureaucrat to high-profile thorn in the Liberal government's side began in late summer, when outgoing budget officer Yves Giroux's term was set to end without a formal successor in...

'Independent state?' Proposed referendum question approved on Alberta separation

'Independent state?' Proposed referendum question approved on Alberta separation

Alberta's election agency announced Monday it has approved a proposed referendum question on the province separating from Canada. The question seeks a yes or no answer to: "Do you agree that the province of Alberta should cease to be a part of Canada to become an independent state?" Elections Alberta said the proponents — the Alberta Prosperity Project and its...

Military considers permanent bases in Latvia as part of Canada's NATO commitment

Military considers permanent bases in Latvia as part of Canada's NATO commitment

Mission to deter Russian aggression in Baltic region already Canada's largest overseas deployment. Canada’s military operations command has embarked on a study about how the country’s NATO deployment in Latvia can be realistically sustained into the future, and one of options could involve more permanent basing, says a senior commander. Lt.-Gen. Steve Boivin, the commander of the Canadian Joint Operations...

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Liberals, Tories Tied at 38%

Liberals, Tories Tied at 38%

A new national Liaison Strategies poll conducted over the weekend for the National Ethnic Press and Media Council of Canada shows the Carney Liberals continuing to slide and now tied with the Conservatives at 38%. The Federal NDP stays steady at 12% nationally, and maintains 19% in British Columbia. Conducted from December 19-21, 2025, using Interactive Voice Response (IVR), the...

Energy Advantage: Ontarians See Oil and Gas Revenues as Key to Jobs, Economy and Trade – Approval process nine time more likely to be seen as too slow rather than too fast.

Energy Advantage: Ontarians See Oil and Gas Revenues as Key to Jobs, Economy and Trade – Approval process nine time more likely to be seen as too slow rather than too fast.

Nanos conducted a representative non-probability online survey of 1000 Ontarians, 18 years of age or older, between December 10 and 12, 2025. The sample is geographically stratified to be representative of Ontario.



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Canada’s tolerance of antisemitic intolerance has gone too far

Canada’s tolerance of antisemitic intolerance has gone too far

Osman Azizov, who allegedly hunted Jewish women, has been released on bail. How warped are our values in the name of accommodation and diversity

Five reasons why Doug Ford won’t be prime minister

Five reasons why Doug Ford won’t be prime minister

Doug Ford for Prime Minister? It’s the question everyone asks me, in both official languages — even though Ontario’s premier can only speak one of them.

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From Washington to Iqaluit, Carney’s travels reveal a lot about his priorities

From Washington to Iqaluit, Carney’s travels reveal a lot about his priorities

Mark Carney became Prime Minister on a promise to reduce Canadian dependence on the increasingly protectionist and unreliable United States under Donald Trump. “It’s clear the U.S. is no longer a reliable partner,” Mr. Carney said after taking office. “The old relationship” Canada had with the United States, he said, is over. Significant parts of his travel reflect this, with...

N.S. premier using false information as reason against updating privacy legislation

N.S. premier using false information as reason against updating privacy legislation

As Tim Houston stands in the Nova Scotia legislature, he looks around and begins to address the room. Houston says that when he was first elected premier, there was a freedom of information request that "gave (me) pause." The premier says he thinks he knows who sent the request in but can't be sure. The applicant had asked for the...

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The Combatting Hate Act actually protects communities of faith

The Combatting Hate Act actually protects communities of faith

An important underlying purpose of the Combatting Hate Act is protecting communities of faith. Nobody should be intimidated or obstructed when they want to go pray. The act gives police clear tools to intervene when intimidation or obstruction of a community space occurs. It is an important signal that Parliament expects police and prosecutors to act to protect communities of...



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Decades before it became a political wedge issue, I knew someone who embodied what DEI ought to be about

Decades before it became a political wedge issue, I knew someone who embodied what DEI ought to be about

Put the playlist on, and I’ll listen to everything from “Adeste Fideles” to “Petit Papa Noël.” I love Christmas music. But dancing among the carols and Christmas songs in my seasonal memory are a couple of other festive numbers, too.

Prediction for Danielle Smith and Alberta in 2026: more chaos

Prediction for Danielle Smith and Alberta in 2026: more chaos

The chickens are coming home to roost for Alberta Premier Danielle Smith. And as we prepare for 2026 to dawn, so many chickens are coming home she’s pretty much running a political poultry farm.

Divisions persist, but Canadians are forming a broad consensus on the need for nation-building

Divisions persist, but Canadians are forming a broad consensus on the need for nation-building

The world of politics often embraces contradictions. Canada faces a stark contradiction today. On the one hand, our country is dangerously divided, regionally and generationally. Both Quebec and Alberta may soon be holding referendums on sovereignty. Many younger Canadians living economically precarious lives resent the Boomers and Gen Xers, with their pensions, health care and other entitlements that millennials and...

Pierre Poilievre under pressure as Conservative caucus cracks

Pierre Poilievre under pressure as Conservative caucus cracks

MPs defect, unity frays and a leadership review looms for the Conservative Leader

Can Poilievre steal back his agenda?

Can Poilievre steal back his agenda?

He will have to face the fact that his opponent has been selling Tory policies better than he did — and do something about it. A year ago, Justin Trudeau was still determined to hang on as prime minister, still professing to believe he could win the next election against all odds and public evidence. If he’d held on, he’d...

Poilievre might be safe as Conservative leader for now — but if he wants to stay that way in 2026, here’s what he must do

Poilievre might be safe as Conservative leader for now — but if he wants to stay that way in 2026, here’s what he must do

I was standing in the back of a half-built warehouse in Kingston in April, watching Pierre Poilievre try to rouse his supporters. “We will reject,” the Conservative leader declared ominously, “the Century Initiative.” There were a few angry shouts from audience members who knew what he was talking about. Everyone else was silent. This radical scheme, designed by “multinational corporations”...



Five things that shook Canadian politics in 2025

Five things that shook Canadian politics in 2025

If the theme of 2025 in Canadian politics was to expect the unexpected, the ways in which the political world turned upside down will reverberate into 2026. Everyone will have their own surprise developments of this truly tumultuous year, but here are my top five picks for the big country-shaking shifts of 2025.

One of the best things about Canada is we’ll never elect a Donald Trump

One of the best things about Canada is we’ll never elect a Donald Trump

There is a great deal to love about Canada, but one of the greatest things is that this country will never have a Donald Trump. That thought crossed my mind as this narcissistic egomaniac addressed his countrymen last week in what could only be called an orgy of ego-liberation and industrial scale mendacity. One American commentator said it was as...

A decade of delays on Indigenous rights

A decade of delays on Indigenous rights

On Dec. 15, 2015, I stood in a hotel in downtown Ottawa as the commissioners of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission shared the 94 Calls to Action. I remember the room with auras of super-bright colour as if the children who were lost had travelled from the stars to share in the moment. We stood in awe of these leaders...

Sergio Marchi still believes in ethical politicians. Here’s why.

Sergio Marchi still believes in ethical politicians. Here’s why.

Sergio Marchi got himself elected to North York city council at the tender age of 26, and just two years later, became a Liberal MP, just in time to see his party thrashed by Brian Mulroney’s Progressive Conservatives in 1984. But he stuck around, eventually earning three different jobs in Jean Chretien’s cabinets between 1993 and 2000. He chronicles it...

Americans ignoring us is to our peril

Americans ignoring us is to our peril

Last week I carefully read the statement of strategic purpose of the Trump administration, a document published by every recent incoming administration within a year of its inauguration. The strategic statement has been received with misgivings by members of the Fortress America school that holds that the United States should be ready at all times to repulse any initiative from...

Pierre Poilievre sounds like a leader bracing for more bad news

Pierre Poilievre sounds like a leader bracing for more bad news

There’s an old clip going around on social media this week showing Stephen Harper on his feet in the Commons batting away a question about the supposed impropriety of a Liberal MP crossing over to join his Conservatives. It was 2006 and Harper was being accused of “seducing” Liberal David Emerson over to his side. The then-PM first shrugged it...



Only Quebec Liberals can prevent the coming existential crisis

Only Quebec Liberals can prevent the coming existential crisis

Ten months away from a crucial provincial election, the Quebec Liberal Party (QLP) finds itself without a leader. Pablo Rodriguez, elected head of the party just last June, was forced to resign following a series of internal disputes and allegations of improprieties in the funding of his leadership campaign. For Rodriguez, a kind, affable man, this is nothing short of...

Could Carney reach a majority through floor-crossing? | Power & Politics

Could Carney reach a majority through floor-crossing? | Power & Politics

As Energy Minister Tim Hodgson says he's getting 'a lot of inquiries' about supporting the Liberal agenda, the Power & Politics panel of party insiders discusses whether Prime Minister Mark Carney's policies may 'attract' enough opposition MPs to reach a majority in the House.

Is there a wrong way to gain a parliamentary majority?

Is there a wrong way to gain a parliamentary majority?

A few days after Michael Ma decided to cross the floor to the Liberals, Pierre Poilievre was asked whether the loss of another MP was a problem for his leadership of the Conservative Party. On the contrary, Poilievre argued, it was a problem for the leadership of Mark Carney. The prime minister was, in Poilievre's words, "trying to manipulate his...

Mark Carney’s 2025: Baptism by Horseshoe

Mark Carney’s 2025: Baptism by Horseshoe

Given the economic and geopolitical events of the past year, it’s tempting to say that Mark Carney’s introduction to elected politics has been a baptism by fire. On closer inspection, it has really been defined by the kind of cosmic luck that most politicians can only dream of. There’s no disputing that 2025 was an unprecedentedly disruptive year in the...

When it comes to vaccines, Canada is normal no longer

When it comes to vaccines, Canada is normal no longer

Canada is being battered by an especially bad flu season. None of this should be particularly surprising, since we had data from the southern hemisphere’s flu season to suggest once winter reared its head here we would be in for the same flu-induced misery as our cousins below the equator. In a normal country, this kind of advance notice would...

Alberta’s separatist movement is no joke

Alberta’s separatist movement is no joke

At some point, Danielle Smith is going to have to pick a side. For months now, Alberta’s premier has been catering to the separatists who dominate the membership of her United Conservative Party while insisting she doesn’t explicitly support their cause. But their appetite just keeps growing, and with Smith’s government clearing the way for a referendum on Alberta independence...



Cutting Red Tape on Spectrum Fees Will Help Build a More Connected, Resilient Canada
Bracing for Year Two of Trump’s Trade War

Bracing for Year Two of Trump’s Trade War

As Canada prepares to enter its second year navigating the aggressive trade policies of Donald Trump, it’s worth pausing a moment to take stock and remind ourselves of what will and won’t work as the focus shifts to the future of the Canada-US-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA). While most Canadians would agree that the tariff policies of Donald Trump have created challenges...

Pierre Poilievre keeps finding ways to disappoint us

Pierre Poilievre keeps finding ways to disappoint us

Pierre Poilievre’s weekend appearance on CBC with Rosemary Barton wasn’t remarkable for what was said. It was revealing for what still couldn’t be said. There was no acknowledgment that losing an election he was widely expected to win might merit reflection. No acceptance that losing his own seat could justify a rethink of a political style built almost entirely on...

In the Jewish community, we’ve become too used to looking over our shoulders

In the Jewish community, we’ve become too used to looking over our shoulders

I thought long and hard before going to a public Hanukkah candle lighting recently. I wouldn’t have gone if my grandson were with me. As it was, my husband asked me to promise to remain on the periphery of the crowd in case I had to run. We’ve been to Bondi Beach. It’s one of those picture-perfect beaches you see...

NDP's Avi Lewis wants to put climate back on the table

NDP's Avi Lewis wants to put climate back on the table

NDP leadership hopeful Avi Lewis earlier this month released his shoot-for-the stars climate policy, titled A Green New Deal for Canada. It’s a retooled shopping list of laudable ideas, starting with a complete ban on new fossil fuel extraction projects, which we know are the single biggest contributor to global warming. Lewis proposes investing billions in “clean energy, building retrofits...

2025 will rank as one of Canada’s great nation-building years

2025 will rank as one of Canada’s great nation-building years

Over lunch the other day, the talk was about how 2025 had triggered a surge of patriotism in this country on account of the back-of-the-hand treatment from the United States. “It’s extraordinary,” said Duncan Ault, a lawyer friend. “As a Canadian I feel a foot taller.” For much of our history we’ve been in the thrall of the U.S., so...

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B.C. Conservative leadership race will present new vision, unify members: Halford

B.C. Conservative leadership race will present new vision, unify members: Halford

It was a surreal moment on a day full of such moments. Trevor Halford walked into the main chamber of the British Columbia legislature on Dec. 3 as interim leader of his Conservative Party of B.C., following an appointment by the party board. Hours earlier, 20 Conservative MLAs had released a letter in which they said that they had lost...

For decades, Canada's military had no combat uniforms designed for women. That's about to change

For decades, Canada's military had no combat uniforms designed for women. That's about to change

More than 30 years after Canada's military allowed women to serve in combat roles, it's now specifically designing uniforms and body armour to fit their bodies. For decades, female soldiers have been wearing uniforms designed primarily for men and some say it has made their jobs harder, contributed to injuries and hurt morale. Retired major Sandra Perron became the country's...

Diab caps student visa applications for 2026, pauses some permanent residency streams

Diab caps student visa applications for 2026, pauses some permanent residency streams

OTTAWA -- Immigration Minister Lena Diab issued new ministerial instructions that include requiring provincial or territorial attestation letters for study permits with the goal of capping foreign student applications at just under 310,000 in the new year.

Ottawa set to revive online harms legislation in 2026: government source

Ottawa set to revive online harms legislation in 2026: government source

The Liberals are preparing to bring forward new standalone legislation to address harmful content found online, reviving a Trudeau-era bill that failed to become law before this past year’s federal election, says a government source. The source, who asked to remain anonymous in order to speak freely, told The Hill Times the government was developing a new version of the...

Canada Post, union reach tentative agreements, with vote expected in new year

Canada Post, union reach tentative agreements, with vote expected in new year

Canada Post and the Canadian Union of Postal Workers say they have reached tentative agreements. The deals announced Monday cover both the Urban Postal Operations and Rural and Suburban Mail Carriers bargaining units. CUPW's national board is recommending members accept the deals during ratification votes set to be held in early 2026.

Carney names friend and former investment banker Mark Wiseman as next U.S. ambassador

Carney names friend and former investment banker Mark Wiseman as next U.S. ambassador

Prime Minister Mark Carney has appointed a global investment banker and pension fund manager to be Canada's next ambassador in Washington. Carney's office said Mark Wiseman, who begins the role Feb. 15, will lead negotiations with the United States on a review of the continental free trade deal. Wiseman is a longtime friend of Carney who was among the first...

Prime Minister Mark Carney named The Canadian Press Newsmaker of the Year

Prime Minister Mark Carney named The Canadian Press Newsmaker of the Year

This time last year, the average Canadian might have struggled to pick Mark Carney's face out of a crowd. Now he's among the most recognizable figures in the country, and was selected The Canadian Press Newsmaker of the Year for 2025 in an annual survey of newsroom editors and leaders from across the country. The vote wasn't even close: Carney...

Canada Weighs Opening Its Housing Market to More Foreign Capital

Canada Weighs Opening Its Housing Market to More Foreign Capital

Canada is considering changes to its ban on foreign home buyers starting in 2027, its housing minister said, as the government looks for ways to increase the supply of affordable places to live.

Stalled legislation means Liberals ‘on the hunt’ for opposition MPs to cross over to achieve majority, say politicos

Stalled legislation means Liberals ‘on the hunt’ for opposition MPs to cross over to achieve majority, say politicos

Seven bills tabled since the start of the 45th Parliament began reached royal assent before the winter break, of which three, C-6, C-7 and C-17, were appropriation bills. Of the remaining bills still moving through the legislative process, several are 'core to the government’s overall agenda,' says Dan Arnold. Any legislation related to the border with the U.S. would be...

'Too much regulation, not enough action': Carney rebuffs Trudeau's climate policies

'Too much regulation, not enough action': Carney rebuffs Trudeau's climate policies

Canada needs clean energy and technology investments to meet emission targets: PM. Prime Minister Mark Carney says Canada has too much regulation and not enough investments in clean energy and technology — and he's making his most direct repudiation yet of his predecessor's environmental policies. "Because I care about the issue fundamentally, I care about what gets done," Carney said...

Four young MPs born in the 2000s say they want to be a voice for Canada's youth

Four young MPs born in the 2000s say they want to be a voice for Canada's youth

The spring federal election saw voters elect four MPs who were born in the 2000s -- the first Canadians from that age cohort ever to take seats in the House of Commons. Eight months into the job, the young MPs -- representing ridings across the country -- say they think they're already making a difference. Liberal MPs Fares Al Soud...

A tariff exemption was Canada's salvation in 2025. It's 'absolutely' at risk in 2026

A tariff exemption was Canada's salvation in 2025. It's 'absolutely' at risk in 2026

U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff campaign appeared to move at a breakneck pace towards Canada's economy this year. But beyond threats of double-digit tariff rates and sharp pain in manufacturing-heavy industries, a key exemption has allowed the majority Canadian goods to continue to cross the southern border duty-free. Experts who spoke to The Canadian Press warned this saving grace for...

New study finds AI chatbots can influence some Canadians to change their vote

New study finds AI chatbots can influence some Canadians to change their vote

Study found Canadians were more likely to be swayed than Americans. Talking with an AI chatbot can successfully convince people to change their votes and could affect the outcome of future elections, according to a new study. The study, which included 1,530 Canadians, also found that the chatbots had more success convincing Canadians to switch their votes than it did...

B.C.'s David Eby 'not seeking' 2026 election, after year that tested NDP coalition

B.C.'s David Eby 'not seeking' 2026 election, after year that tested NDP coalition

It should have been a very bad day for David Eby's government. But on Dec. 3, the morning after the pending closure of the pulp mill in Crofton, B.C., was announced with the loss of 350 jobs, the political focus was on the leadership saga in the Opposition B.C. Conservatives, as 20 of the party's MLAs called on then-leader John...

Will anyone want Canada’s oil and gas? Energy regulator delays forecast due to shifting policies

Will anyone want Canada’s oil and gas? Energy regulator delays forecast due to shifting policies

Canada’s national energy regulator has postponed its report outlining future demand for fossil fuels, citing an “evolving energy and policy landscape.” The move comes as both Ottawa and Washington have recently scrapped numerous climate rules while Prime Minister Mark Carney has promoted oil and gas projects as “nation-building” endeavours. The regulator had expected to issue updated projections for “early in...

Dallas Brodie reinstated as leader of OneBC party after abrupt removal this month

Dallas Brodie reinstated as leader of OneBC party after abrupt removal this month

British Columbia legislator Dallas Brodie, who earlier this month was removed as leader of the OneBC party, says she has been reinstated. Brodie says on social media she has regained control of the party after negotiations following what she is describing as a "difficult 10 days." The party itself acknowledged Brodie's return in a brief social media post, saying it...

Hundreds of public servants to learn about job cuts in the new year

Hundreds of public servants to learn about job cuts in the new year

Federal public servants are expected to learn about job cuts in their departments when they return from their holiday break. Departments such as Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship, Environment and Climate Change and Employment and Social Development have told their staff already that news on job cuts will be shared in the new year. Ottawa is looking to cut program spending...

Meet Tim Hodgson, the unconventional Energy Minister with a Bay Street eye for deals

Meet Tim Hodgson, the unconventional Energy Minister with a Bay Street eye for deals

For companies that arrive cap-in-hand to pitch energy or mining projects that might meet Canada’s moment of economic reckoning, a sit-down with the most influential member of Prime Minister Mark Carney’s cabinet can be a novel and jarring experience. Tim Hodgson isn’t much for the pleasantries that usually kick off such meetings, sometimes at length, with other ministers. Nor does...

Ottawa’s AI strategy could help Canada capitalize on homegrown innovation, say task force members

Ottawa’s AI strategy could help Canada capitalize on homegrown innovation, say task force members

Several members of the government’s artificial intelligence task force say they are worried Ottawa has already fallen behind in the global race to capitalize on a burgeoning economic driver, but they believe the forthcoming AI strategy may provide an opportunity for Canada to catch up. Louis Têtu, executive chairman of the AI software multinational Coveo, said Canada has long suffered...

Anti-immigrant sentiment rises with loss of consensus on immigration policy

Anti-immigrant sentiment rises with loss of consensus on immigration policy

Canada's long-held consensus on immigration -- that it's a net positive for the country -- has been coming apart in recent years. Roughly half of the population thinks too many immigrants have been coming to Canada, according to several private polling firms. That parallels a government survey from November 2024, when 54 per cent of respondents to a phone survey...

Hundreds of pests found in federal buildings as feds draft back-to-office plan

Hundreds of pests found in federal buildings as feds draft back-to-office plan

Insects, bats, rodents and other pests have been spotted in federal buildings more than 500 times in the Ottawa area this year, as the government makes plans to get public servants to spend more time in the office. Amber Sabourin, a spokesperson for Public Services and Procurement Canada, said there were 549 confirmed reports of pests in 93 Crown-owned buildings...

Carney has sketched the broad strokes of an AI policy, but details remain vague

Carney has sketched the broad strokes of an AI policy, but details remain vague

At the Paris AI Action Summit in February, then-prime minister Justin Trudeau and other world leaders watched as U.S. Vice President JD Vance took the stage to rail against AI regulation. Vance's speech -- delivered with his face projected on a large screen between the intricately-carved pillars lining the stage at the historic Grand Palais -- marked the beginning of...

Alberta Next panel recommends ditching RCMP, referendum to quit CPP

Alberta Next panel recommends ditching RCMP, referendum to quit CPP

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith's hand-picked panel re-examining the province's relationship with Ottawa says it's time to ditch the RCMP and hold a provincewide referendum on quitting the Canada Pension Plan. The Alberta Next panel, in a report with findings and recommendations, says creating a provincial pension plan was the most hotly debated topic among citizens and one that needs to...

Poilievre: ‘I’m not fighting for the sake of fighting’

Poilievre: ‘I’m not fighting for the sake of fighting’

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre says Canadian voters know he’s a “fighter,” but that he needs to do a better job explaining what he’s actually fighting for. In a year-end interview with Global News anchor and executive editor Dawna Friesen, Poilievre said he has reflected on his leadership and approach after April’s disappointing election loss. One of his conclusions was that...

Kirsten Hillman is leaving Washington. Here's what she's learned about Trump's America

Kirsten Hillman is leaving Washington. Here's what she's learned about Trump's America

Canada's U.S. ambassador says empathy for everyday Americans is important. If you ask Canada's Ambassador to the U.S. Kirsten Hillman how to get Trump-era Republicans on Canada's side, she'll tell you a story about a stuffed bison head. Hillman first came to Washington as deputy ambassador in 2017. She says around that time, Canada was trying to make inroads with...

Carney lays out security 'guardrails' for China as Canada looks to build up relationship

Carney lays out security 'guardrails' for China as Canada looks to build up relationship

Prime minister says AI, critical minerals are areas of concern. Prime Minister Mark Carney has begun to lay out publicly what he sees as boundaries when dealing with China, as his government wades into a new relationship with the economic giant. Carney, who earlier this year called China one of Canada's biggest security threats, has more recently spoken openly about...

Good Talk -- It's a Bob Rae Day

Good Talk -- It's a Bob Rae Day

With both Chantal and Bruce away this week, a special program for our final Good Talk of 2025. Bob Rae, fresh from his five years at the United Nations as Canada's Ambassador, and with his wealth of political experience, joins us to talk Canada and politics. It's a wide ranging discussion, so strap in for an engaging Good Talk.

NDP campaign review cites 'brutal environment' for worst-ever election result

NDP campaign review cites 'brutal environment' for worst-ever election result

'Many New Democrats are allergic to fundraising,' report says. The federal NDP released its internal campaign review Friday, largely avoiding casting blame on senior party officials and instead citing issues that were beyond the control of New Democrats for its worst election loss. "The overall verdict from campaign staff was that the NDP ran a technically solid campaign in a...

Karl Blackburn will not run to replace Pablo Rodriguez as Quebec Liberal leader

Karl Blackburn will not run to replace Pablo Rodriguez as Quebec Liberal leader

MONTREAL -- One of Pablo Rodriguez's main rivals during the Quebec Liberal leadership race earlier this year says he will not run to replace him.

Former UCP member announces new 'Progressive Tory Party of Alberta'

Former UCP member announces new 'Progressive Tory Party of Alberta'

A former member of Premier Danielle Smith's government caucus says Elections Alberta has approved the name for a new political party, after the government banned a list of monikers it could use, including "conservative." Airdrie-Cochrane MLA Peter Guthrie announced in a social media post on Thursday evening that the new party will be known as the Progressive Tory Party of...



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'60 Minutes' pulls story about Trump deportations from its lineup

'60 Minutes' pulls story about Trump deportations from its lineup

AP Media Writer (AP) -- An internal CBS News battle over a "60 Minutes" story critical of the Trump administration has exploded publicly, with a correspondent charging it was kept off the air for political reasons and news chief Bari Weiss saying Monday the story did not "advance the ball."

Schumer urges Senate to take legal action over Justice Department's staggered Epstein files release

Schumer urges Senate to take legal action over Justice Department's staggered Epstein files release

NEW YORK (AP) -- The Senate's top Democrat urged his colleagues Monday to take legal action over the Justice Department's incremental and heavily redacted release of records pertaining to the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Vance refuses to set red lines over bigotry as conservatives feud at Turning Point

Vance refuses to set red lines over bigotry as conservatives feud at Turning Point

PHOENIX (AP) -- Vice President JD Vance said Sunday the conservative movement should be open to everyone as long as they "love America," declining to condemn a streak of antisemitism that has divided the Republican Party and roiled the opening days of Turning Point USA's annual convention.

Turning Point showcases the discord that Republicans like Vance will need to navigate in the future

Turning Point showcases the discord that Republicans like Vance will need to navigate in the future

PHOENIX (AP) -- The next presidential election is three years away, but Turning Point USA already knows it wants Vice President JD Vance as the Republican nominee.

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Carney names friend and former investment banker Mark Wiseman as next U.S. ambassador

Carney names friend and former investment banker Mark Wiseman as next U.S. ambassador

Prime Minister Mark Carney has appointed a global investment banker and pension fund manager to be Canada's next ambassador in Washington. Carney's office said Mark Wiseman, who begins the role Feb. 15, will lead negotiations with the United States on a review of the continental free trade deal. Wiseman is a longtime friend of Carney who was among the first...

Kirsten Hillman is leaving Washington. Here's what she's learned about Trump's America

Kirsten Hillman is leaving Washington. Here's what she's learned about Trump's America

Canada's U.S. ambassador says empathy for everyday Americans is important. If you ask Canada's Ambassador to the U.S. Kirsten Hillman how to get Trump-era Republicans on Canada's side, she'll tell you a story about a stuffed bison head. Hillman first came to Washington as deputy ambassador in 2017. She says around that time, Canada was trying to make inroads with...

Global Affairs officials in China to pave the way for Carney visit

Global Affairs officials in China to pave the way for Carney visit

Senior Global Affairs leadership and a parliamentary aide to Prime Minister Mark Carney are in China now for talks that could pave the way for him to visit next year. Mr. Carney, looking for new export markets because of an increasingly protectionist United States under President Donald Trump, is trying to patch up relations with Beijing after a severe diplomatic...

Liberal MP says she was shoved by Israeli officials at West Bank border crossing

Liberal MP says she was shoved by Israeli officials at West Bank border crossing

A Liberal MP says she was shoved multiple times by Israeli border officials as her delegation was denied entry to the West Bank Tuesday morning. Ontario MP Iqra Khalid says she was pushed after trying to check on a member of the roughly 30-person delegation who was pulled aside for additional questioning after the group had been at the Allenby...

Israel blocks Canadian delegation -- including MPs -- from entering the West Bank

Israel blocks Canadian delegation -- including MPs -- from entering the West Bank

The National Council of Canadian Muslims says a delegation of Canadians that includes six members of Parliament was denied entry to the West Bank at the Israeli border Tuesday morning. Israel's embassy in Canada says the group was denied entry because of links to Islamic Relief Worldwide, which is listed as a terror entity by Israel. B.C. NDP MP Jenny...

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2025 Year in Review: 5 Things We Learned About Asia and Canada

2025 Year in Review: 5 Things We Learned About Asia and Canada

The year 2025 was a year of volatility, experimentation, and recalibration across Asia and Canada. Much of the volatility stemmed from U.S. President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariff agenda, which upended global trade norms and injected new uncertainty into supply chains. China, meanwhile, pressed ahead with an increasingly assertive industrial strategy, even as it contended with slower domestic growth and structural...

Canada’s China reset just got much harder

Canada’s China reset just got much harder

Even modest Canadian engagement with China may be judged less on its merits than on how it is interpreted in the U.S. within a framework designed to ‘wind down adversarial outside influence.’

Canada’s Nobel Moment and Budget 2026: Inspiring an Innovation Agenda

Canada’s Nobel Moment and Budget 2026: Inspiring an Innovation Agenda

On November 4th, Budget 2025 shifted the Carney government’s policy priorities to economic growth and national defence in response to a rupture in Canada-US trade relations and new NATO commitments. Public finance with a focus on capital investment is the principal instrument of change. In line with this strategy, a closer look at Canada’s sagging productivity suggests the next budget...


Substacks

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A collection of SubStack publishing within Canadian public affairs.

If you're not watching what's happening in Québec you're losing the plot

If you're not watching what's happening in Québec you're losing the plot

You may want to dust off your Bescherelles, Canadian politicos: the battle for the future of Québec is where things are going to happen in 2026. In case you missed it, today the new leader of the Québec Liberal Party, Pablo Rodriguez, announced his resignation. His resignation was precipitated by a terrible, scandalous month for the QLP — one that...

A shrinking landscape for transparency

A shrinking landscape for transparency

The federal government this week dumped its load of annual statistics about citizens’ use of the Access to Information Act.

Remembering Stephen Thorne (1959-2025)

Remembering Stephen Thorne (1959-2025)

Stephen Thorne has died. The bitter, unexpected death of a tough journalist who wrote about death but couldn’t report on his own. He’d have written a damn fine story about it. I was his boss for years, in Halifax and Ottawa, though Stephen had no time for bosses. He followed his nose for stories whether or not anybody asked for...

Podcasts

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The Year of the Elbows

The Year of the Elbows

Noor Azrieh and Sam Konnert look back on the moments that defined Canadian politics this year. We revisit viral clips, media meltdowns, Question Period fever dreams, floor crossers, immigration fights, Alberta separatism, national projects (that may or may not exist yet), and the growing sense that everything is moving very fast… but also somehow not at all.

Political Year in Review

Political Year in Review

David Herle, Scott Reid, Jordan Leichnitz, and Kory Teneycke provide insights on the latest in Canadian politics.

How Trudeau Destroyed Canada’s Consensus on Immigration | Everything Political

How Trudeau Destroyed Canada’s Consensus on Immigration | Everything Political

Tony Keller joins the Everything Political panel with former MPs Martha Hall Findlay and Tony Clement to discuss his book “Borderline Chaos: How Canada Got Immigration Right, and Then Wrong,” the historical consensus on immigration, the rise in levels under Trudeau, the temporary foreign workers program, if the Canadian consensus on immigration has been broken, where we are now, and...

Canada’s woman in Washington opens up before her departure

Canada’s woman in Washington opens up before her departure

After eight years in Washington, Canada's U.S. ambassador Kirsten Hillman is coming home. Over that time, she has seen Canada's relationship with the United States transform, for better and for worse. As she prepares to step down from her ambassadorship, she explains in an extended interview with host Catherine Cullen how she’s built critical connections in the U.S. capital —...